By ani and By Air had done the field work together. One old woman who had been in Riverside for years was a manic depressive. When she was manic, she was full of fun and always was the first one to greet me on my ward rounds. When she went into the depressive phase, she would shout ”Get away from me! I don’t want to talk to you.” One time, one of the patients did not seem well, and I examined his chest and took an X- ray. I found out with further tests that he had TB. The question was, how did he get it? I ordered all patients in the ward to be given a chest examination, thereby finding four more cases of active TB. None of them had cavities, so where was the spread of the disease? Taking nothing for granted, I went down and counted the patients. There was one more than we had X-rays for, so by elimination, I found a man with marked Ponset’s Disease. His head was almost to his knees; they thought he was too difficult to X-ray. I told them to X- ray him on his side, and behold there was a large cavity. We put the six TB patients in a room, and with the excellent help of Doctor Found, we gave them Streptomycin. None of them died from TB, and it was a good training experience, especially after I had worked in the TB hospital in Halifax. I always recall one night the lights went out and I had to walk down a long hall. I could hear some patients coming to meet me. I just slunk by the wall and let them pass. Another time, I was called to examine a teacher who was in for assessment. He was in the active part of the hospital, and I was thinking that he could have a tumour. I did a neurological/physical exam on him. I could not find any neurological signs of pathology on him, but when I started out of the room with his chart in one hand and 180